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Icelandic Whalers Kill First Fin Whale

Whaling already hurting tourism to Iceland
Reykjavik (AFP) Oct 20 - Iceland's decision earlier this week to resume commercial whaling despite an international ban has already hurt the country's tourism industry, with several whale watching companies reporting cancellations on Friday. "We have received several emails from people saying they have decided not to visit Iceland as long as Iceland is conducting whaling," Thorunn Harvardottir of the whale watching company Nordursiglingar in eastern Iceland told AFP.

The Whale Watching Centre in Reykjavik said it had also had about a dozen cancellations since the government on Tuesday authorized its whalers to hunt 30 minke whales and nine fin whales by August 31, 2007 for export. That makes Iceland only the second country after Norway to defy a 1986 moratorium on commercial whaling.

"We have had several cancellations. They disagree with the policy of the Icelandic government. Some people write three lines, some write a lot," the centre's managing director Einar Steinthorsson said. "We are very sad about this," he said, adding that Iceland's tourism industry was "very much against whaling as a whole."

Tourists to Iceland come primarily from Scandinavia, Germany, Britain, France and the United States. The tourism industry represents between about six percent of Iceland's gross national product, according to Thorleifur Jonsson of the Icelandic Travel Industry Association. The whale watching season is nearing its end now and is expected to resume in the spring. Steinthorsson said his company had hoped to see a rise in the number of whale watchers from 23,000 last season to 26,000 this coming year, but the resumption of whaling "is going to have a big impact on our operations."

Havardottir, whose company offers three-hour whale watching tours off Husavik on the northeastern coast, said the whale hunt hurts Iceland's overall image. "It's very hard to convince other people in foreign countries to come despite the whaling decision, since their opinions are strongly against it. I don't think we'll be succesful in changing peoples minds," she said.

The Icelandic Travel Industry Association said the tourism industry had been growing robustly in the past decade, thanks in part to the emergence of whale watching as a tourist attraction. "We are very worried that (the resumption of whaling) will have an impact... The worst case scenario would be if tourists stop coming to Iceland," Jonsson said.

by Staff Writers
Reykjavik (AFP) Oct 22, 2006
Icelandic whalers have killed their first fin whale since the country announced last week it was resuming commercial whaling despite an international ban, media and whaling organisations said on Sunday. Icelandic daily Morgunbladid said a newly-built whaling ship, Hvalur 9, had killed a large fin whale and brought it in to a landing station on Sunday.

Rune Froevik, a spokesman for the Norwegian-based High North Alliance representing Arctic fishing communities, told AFP the whale measured 65 to 70 feet (20 to 21 meters) and was caught west of Iceland.

"This is the first fin whale that has been killed since they announced the return to commercial whaling," Froevik told AFP.

The fin whale is the second largest species of whale after the blue whale.

Iceland announced on Tuesday it had authorized its whalers to hunt 30 minke whales and nine fin whales through August 2007 for export, thereby making it only the second country after Norway to outright defy a 1986 moratorium on commercial whaling.

The decision has sparked protests from environmental groups such as Greenpeace and a number of countries, including Australia, New Zealand and the European Union.

But Reykjavik has argued that "none of the planned catches involve any endangered or threatened stocks of whales.

"They only involve abundant stocks and are linked to Iceland's overall policy of sustainable utilisation of marine resources," the fisheries ministry said.

According to estimates agreed on by the International Whaling Commission (IWC), there are close to 70,000 minke whales in the central North Atlantic, of which around 43,600 are in Icelandic waters.

Fin whales in the central North Atlantic number around 25,800.

Froevik said that while minke and fin whales appear on a list of species threatened with extinction drawn up by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), the stocks around Iceland are strong enough to sustain the country's whaling quota.

"The stocks are not endangered ... It's a lie from beginning to end. It's just propaganda" from anti-whaling nations, he said.

earlier related report
Iceland 'sticking two fingers in the air' over whales: Australia
Sydney (AFP) Oct 22 - Iceland is "sticking two fingers in the air" to the rest of the world by resuming commercial whaling, Australia's environment minister said Sunday.

"This is not just sticking a harpoon into a species that's endangered," said Senator Ian Campbell.

"This is really sticking two fingers in the air at the entire global community, the entire international, environmental institutional arrangements."

Iceland said last week it would issue licenses to hunt nine fin whales and 30 minke whales in a year, becoming only the second nation after Norway to defy outright an international moratorium that took effect in 1986.

"You wonder how Iceland could be a member of the global community with an act like this," Campbell told reporters. "They can't be taken seriously on any environmental issue in the future."

Australia has been at the forefront of a campaign to stop the resumption of commercial whaling and has declared a whale sanctuary in a large swathe of the Southern Ocean that it considers to be its Antarctic territory.

earlier related report
EU urges Iceland to reconsider whaling decision
Brussels (AFP) Oct 20 - The European Commission urged Iceland Friday to reconsider its decision to resume commercial whaling and said that a return to the hunt could upset the biological balance among marine life. "If it was simply a matter for the EU to decide, all commercial whaling would be abandoned once and for all," the EU's executive body said in a statement.

"Whales are a fragile component in the biological equilibrium of marine fauna, already threatened by the unwarranted resumption of whaling, and by other human activities, mainly pollution," it said.

Iceland said Tuesday it would issue licenses to hunt nine fin whales and 30 minke whales in a year, becoming only the second nation after Norway to defy outright the international moratorium that took effect in 1986.

Whaling is banned under EU legislation, and the Commission reiterated its support for the international moratorium.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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